Got my package yesterday, didn't feel like hacking together Arch Linux ARM for the new Raspberry Pi yet, so I installed Gentoo instead.

Gotta say that it's a lot snappier. Emerge is still obviously slower than a desktop, and I/O is still a problem you need to resolve with NFS etc but you might not need to set-up a distcc anymore if you don't mind waiting a bit. I'm at least enjoying everything so far, Ubuntu or Windows 10 aren't really for me

PS. Installing is quite easy with the guide, just replace the stage3 with armv7a and get kernel7.img from github instead of kernel.img(but no need to rename), the few raspberrypi-* stuff in portage is going to need a little refreshment but all in good time
PPS. -march=armv7-a -mtune=cortex-a7 -mfpu=neon

The mark 2 PI model B i only out for lass than a week, probably gentoo makers don't even have one yet.
So its unlikely gentoo for ARMv7 PI's is already available, and unmodified gentoo won't run on a PI2, at the very least the bootfiles and kernel needs to be updated to add ARMv7 support.

Did you try to add MAKEOPTS="j5" into your make.conf? Since we have now a multicore CPU, this should speed up compiling.
I am trying it now on my RPI2. Maybe i can tell you more shortly about speed or bugs with this flag.

Yes, I forgot the MAKEOPTS on the rpi2. But I have now started to use distcc (the distcc wiki entry from Gentoo for the rpi is still valid, just use armv7a* instead of arm6j*), so I don't know how fast the compilation process really is.

I think you should always see this screen, since it is the video initialization screen. Nevertheless, I will re-evaluate my howto, as soon as I have finished my RPI2 installation using another SD card... Sorry, I'm currently busy and could not do any further tests.

I have followed your tutorial. The problem is keyboard is not responding. I can see some messages about the keyboard is detected during boot, so I cannot configure system because SSH is not enabled by default. The keyboard is working fine with my Linux laptop and I'm using a 2 A power supply.

I've been putting together my own notes for installing gentoo onto the rpi2, it's still a work in progress (I still need to recompile a new kernel instead of using the raspian one / setup my own overlay / get the userspace tools working etc)
I'm still quite supprised at how fast it is at compiling on it's own and how little heat it's generating

For the keyboard issue, it might be a problem with missing the kernel modules inside the gentoo install if your using the kernel from raspian

In short, Raspbian is still on the SD Card, Gentoo is on an external USB Hardrive...
CHOST = armv7a-hardfloat

Kernel is simply pulled from Raspberry Foundation GiT.
It really was a very fast, quick, painless install.

Of course some people will play with the flags, GCC manual has a warning about setting the FPU as "neon-vfpv4" . . . as it is not IEEE 754 compliant and it just will not work without the additional -funsafe-math-optimizations. My opinion is that vanilla gentoo with armv7a-hardfloat is enough optimisation when balanced with my free time.

Really one has to read the cryptic GCC documentation and poke around ARM website to make sense of it all. But the short version is that Raspbian has an antique binary for ARM 6, gentoo does a generic one size fits all ARM 7, but the Raspberry has the sexy extra hardware acceleration and the newer floating point so, knowing people would want it, I cooked it.

I am rather cynical as to actual speed improvements, but for a Raspberry 3 an optimised Stage-3 probably makes a lot of sense - should you be trying to play say X265 encoded video.